Components

Example details

 
だれその
ねこ
すず
つけられる
Who can put a bell on the cat?
Grammar and points of interest
Conjugations and inflections
Words
1
Most common form:
who
(click the word to view an additional 1 form, examples and links)
Most common form: ねこ
noun
1. cat
2. shamisen
(click the word to view an additional 4 meanings and 2 forms, examples and links)
1
Most common form: すず
noun
1. bell (often globular)
2. singing bowl (bell in the shape of a bowl)  (this meaning is restricted to reading りん)
(click the word to view an additional 2 readings, examples and links)
0
Most common form: 漬ける
ichidan verb, transitive verb
1. to soak; to seep; to dip in
2. to pickle  (this meaning is restricted to form 漬ける, つける)
(click the word to view an additional 2 forms, examples and links)
Kanji
ビョウ   ねこ cat   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
ビョウ   なわ-    なえ seedling   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
grass   
デン   た rice field   
ケン   いぬ dog   
レイ   リン   すず a small bell   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
レイ    order   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
assembly, gathering   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
イチ   イツ   ひと    ひと- one   
ジン   ニン   ひと person   
seal
キン   コン   かね gold; money   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
ジン   ニン   ひと man   
eight
オウ    king   
Please LOG IN to view this kanji's mnemonic
ド   ト   ground; earth   つち ground, earth, soil   
Flashcards
Please LOG IN for free flashcards
More info on this sentence: Google Japan ⇗ Sentence translate
Problem with this example? Question or comment? Please CONTACT US.
Kanshudo is your AI Japanese tutor, and your constant companion on the road to mastery of the Japanese language. To get started learning Japanese, just follow the study recommendations on your Dashboard. You can use Quick search (accessible using the icon at the top of every page) to look up any Japanese word, kanji or grammar point, as well as to find anything on Kanshudo quickly. For an overview, take the tour.
Search results include information from a variety of sources, including Kanshudo (kanji mnemonics, kanji readings, kanji components, vocab and name frequency data, grammar points, examples), JMdict (vocabulary), Tatoeba (examples), Enamdict (names), KanjiVG (kanji animations and stroke order), and Joy o' Kanji (kanji and radical synopses). Translations provided by Google's Neural Machine Translation engine. For more information see credits.
×